‘Video portrait of Dave Macleod’… Challenge, dedication and achievement. What you can do if you try
your socks off; in light of the last post, worth a watch.
We are capable of
achieving incredible and often unbelievable feats. The question is; what gives
us the drive to do so? When you’re in a shitstorm ascending some monstrosity,
sweating like a beaver, short of breath, hearing your own incessant heartbeat.
Or pushing hard in training, applying the principle of overload, praying for
that extra rep or a faster time; what keeps you going? Is it just pure
masochism? Is it ego-fuelling? Is it just because you can? Or is there a more
fundamental reason…
We choose to place
ourselves on the edge, exposed to the extremes; forced to ace that move,
survive the heat, brave the cold, and overcome the obstacle.
- - - ENDORPHINS *
The adrenaline
hit, the release of endorphins, the physical and mental progression; all
logical and natural reasoning for our adventurephilia. But there’s more than
just the temporary fix; the adventure bug bites hard and it doesn’t let go.
It’s infectious. It’s often difficult not to be inspired by
someone else’s drive and achievements, whether you’re part of a group training
session or watching a world record solo ascent of the Eiger.
Complexities
aside, it all boils down to the simple fact that as living beings, the act of
progression is hardwired into our brains. Whatever our interests, we push
to achieve greatness in order to evolve and master our ability to survive. If you do something enough you will get good at it, whether it’s
sitting on your arse or running an ultra-marathon. It’s what you do that
defines you; we have this drive because it makes us who we are.
You're coming to the
end of your life. You've left behind the time where you were able to conquer
your dreams, make sense of the world and relish achievement. Did you ever
regret not making enough money? Were you unsatisfied with the possessions you
had acquired throughout your lifetime?
Or
did you wish you had been more connected with the world? Seen more places, met
more people, overcome more challenges, lived life as it was meant to be?
Travel and adventure
introduces simplicity, narrows focus and allows us to remove ourselves from the
grasp of the monotonousnorm. If you ask any
climber, mountaineer, runner, explorer or cyclist why they go and do what they
do, the common response will be "because
it is there". An uninspiring answer to most but it reflects this
simplicity and narrow focus from which we can achieve great happiness, a sense
of being and greater understanding of ourselves and more importantly; life.
In light of all this,
my adventure psyche has led meto embarkon aPan
Eur-Asia CycleExpedition. A long
distance cycle to Mumbai from London in 2014, alongside Ben Lewis, a good
friend from university. Though ridiculous to some, especially given I have less
than one year of experience in a graduate job, it was one of the easiest things
I have evercommittedto...Life
is for living.
I conclude with this quote:
Twenty years from now you willbe more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.
Mark Twain(1835 – 1910)
G.
...An awesome blog by a friend: http://climbingwetrock.blogspot.com